Voight Well Road is a short, 1/4-mile-long dirt road that loops off Gold Butte Road, runs through the Voight Well area, and reconnects with Gold Butte Road.

This road provides access to Voight Well (an historic corral), Granite Spring (dry), several primitive campsites, Gold Butte Peak Road, and an old arrastra (like a grist mill), thought to be among the oldest evidence of gold mining in the area (dating to Spanish explorers in 1730).

Other than the standard warnings about hiking in the desert, ... this is a safe road, but the area is wild and remote and without services of any kind (no restrooms, no water, no gas, no food). Bring what you need to survive. Be prepared and be self-reliant. Someone will find you eventually if you stay on a main road, but be prepared to survive alone for a day or two.

Be aware that old mines surround the area, nails in old boards are present, and barbed wire presents tripping hazards

About 20 yards past the cattle guard, Voight Well Road East forks left into the Voight Well area. In another 0.14 miles down Gold Butte Road, Voight Well Road West forks hard to the left and turns back into the Voight Well area.

Voight Well Road bends right while Gold Butte Peak Road forks left

The Road

From Gold Butte Road (Table 1, Site 1650), Voight Well Road East runs due south 0.10 miles to the historic corral (Voight Well, Site 1698). At the corral, the road bends right and runs another 0.12 miles to reconnect with Gold Butte Road (Site 1651).

At the bend by the corral (Site 1698), Gold Butte Peak Road forks to the left to runs east, eventually all the way to a mine site only a few steps below the summit of Gold Butte Peak.

Visitors will find plenty of open, flat spots near the corral (Site 1698) and elsewhere (Site 1699) along these roads to pull up trailers and camp. While here, please respect this historic site and refrain from burning historic lumber in campfires. Also, be sure to distinguish between "historical junk" and "trash" when picking up litter in the area.